The present invention is directed generally to a
nebulizer for the formation of micro-droplets from liquid medicaments for respiratory
patient treatment, and more specifically, to a baffled
nebulizer wherein a static baffle used to form an atomized medicament is proximal to a shied which responds to patient
respiration force to oscillate from an
aerosol flow occluding position to an
aerosol flow open position. During
inhalation, the shield moves into a first registration format to allow passage of the atomized medicament (nebula) to the patient. During
exhalation / non-use, a biasing pressure maintains said shield in a second registration format such that the nebula is retarded from passing to the patient and is coalesced into
macro-droplets which return to a supply reservoir for re-atomization. The present
nebulizer design is particularly adaptable for controlling atomization in response to patient respiratory forces exceeding a defined threshold; allowing for opportunity to control
inhalation airflow and enhanced therapy regimes.